| 
237 | 237 | //! pointer. For code which *does* cast a usize to a pointer, the scope of the change depends  | 
238 | 238 | //! on exactly what you're doing.  | 
239 | 239 | //!  | 
240 |  | -//! In general you just need to make sure that if you want to convert a usize address to a  | 
 | 240 | +//! In general, you just need to make sure that if you want to convert a usize address to a  | 
241 | 241 | //! pointer and then use that pointer to read/write memory, you need to keep around a pointer  | 
242 | 242 | //! that has sufficient provenance to perform that read/write itself. In this way all of your  | 
243 | 243 | //! casts from an address to a pointer are essentially just applying offsets/indexing.  | 
 | 
309 | 309 | //!   i.e. the usual "ZSTs are fake, do what you want" rules apply *but* this only applies  | 
310 | 310 | //!   for actual forgery (integers cast to pointers). If you borrow some struct's field  | 
311 | 311 | //!   that *happens* to be zero-sized, the resulting pointer will have provenance tied to  | 
312 |  | -//!   that allocation and it will still get invalidated if the allocation gets deallocated.  | 
 | 312 | +//!   that allocation, and it will still get invalidated if the allocation gets deallocated.  | 
313 | 313 | //!   In the future we may introduce an API to make such a forged allocation explicit.  | 
314 | 314 | //!  | 
315 | 315 | //! * [`wrapping_offset`][] a pointer outside its provenance. This includes pointers  | 
@@ -698,7 +698,7 @@ pub const fn dangling_mut<T>() -> *mut T {  | 
698 | 698 | ///  | 
699 | 699 | /// If there is no 'exposed' provenance that justifies the way this pointer will be used,  | 
700 | 700 | /// the program has undefined behavior. In particular, the aliasing rules still apply: pointers  | 
701 |  | -/// and references that have been invalidated due to aliasing accesses cannot be used any more,  | 
 | 701 | +/// and references that have been invalidated due to aliasing accesses cannot be used anymore,  | 
702 | 702 | /// even if they have been exposed!  | 
703 | 703 | ///  | 
704 | 704 | /// Note that there is no algorithm that decides which provenance will be used. You can think of this  | 
@@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ const unsafe fn swap_nonoverlapping_simple_untyped<T>(x: *mut T, y: *mut T, coun  | 
1097 | 1097 |         // If we end up here, it's because we're using a simple type -- like  | 
1098 | 1098 |         // a small power-of-two-sized thing -- or a special type with particularly  | 
1099 | 1099 |         // large alignment, particularly SIMD types.  | 
1100 |  | -        // Thus we're fine just reading-and-writing it, as either it's small  | 
 | 1100 | +        // Thus, we're fine just reading-and-writing it, as either it's small  | 
1101 | 1101 |         // and that works well anyway or it's special and the type's author  | 
1102 | 1102 |         // presumably wanted things to be done in the larger chunk.  | 
1103 | 1103 | 
 
  | 
@@ -1290,7 +1290,7 @@ pub const unsafe fn read<T>(src: *const T) -> T {  | 
1290 | 1290 |     // provides enough information to know that this is a typed operation.  | 
1291 | 1291 | 
 
  | 
1292 | 1292 |     // However, as of March 2023 the compiler was not capable of taking advantage  | 
1293 |  | -    // of that information.  Thus the implementation here switched to an intrinsic,  | 
 | 1293 | +    // of that information. Thus, the implementation here switched to an intrinsic,  | 
1294 | 1294 |     // which lowers to `_0 = *src` in MIR, to address a few issues:  | 
1295 | 1295 |     //  | 
1296 | 1296 |     // - Using `MaybeUninit::assume_init` after a `copy_nonoverlapping` was not  | 
@@ -1570,7 +1570,7 @@ pub const unsafe fn write<T>(dst: *mut T, src: T) {  | 
1570 | 1570 | /// As a result, using `&packed.unaligned as *const FieldType` causes immediate  | 
1571 | 1571 | /// *undefined behavior* in your program.  | 
1572 | 1572 | ///  | 
1573 |  | -/// Instead you must use the [`ptr::addr_of_mut!`](addr_of_mut)  | 
 | 1573 | +/// Instead, you must use the [`ptr::addr_of_mut!`](addr_of_mut)  | 
1574 | 1574 | /// macro to create the pointer. You may use that returned pointer together with  | 
1575 | 1575 | /// this function.  | 
1576 | 1576 | ///  | 
 | 
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